Los Angeles Times

Shoot, look at all of the sprouts this spring

A superbloom has shown up in an unlikely location: Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport. But wildflower­s have sprung up there before.

- By Summer Lin

Los Angeles residents hoping to see a superbloom this spring don’t need to go far — a field of flowers has sprung up between the runways at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport.

A series of recent storms and heavy rains have caused a large swath of orange f lowers to bloom in the grassy unpaved sections of the airport’s runways.

“Over the years, the superbloom at LAX has grown to become one of the most special and natural experience­s the airport has to offer to guests flying in and out of Los Angeles in the spring,” Dae Levine, managing director of marketing and communicat­ions for Los Angeles World Airports, said in a statement.

“If you happen to be taking off or touching down at LAX in the coming weeks, be sure to look outside your window to catch a glimpse of this rare sighting.”

Wildflower­s also appeared on LAX runways in the spring of 2019, after heavy winter storms.

When they blossomed in 2019, a debate sprouted among airport officials and native plant experts over whether the f lowers sprang up on their own or were planted.

Tim Becker, horticultu­re director at the Theodore Payne Foundation, said that the fields of flowers at LAX are “wild, but not to California.”

The flowers appear to be gazanias, also known as African daisies, a plant native to South Africa that spreads so easily it has been deemed invasive by the California Invasive Plant Council.

While a riot of flowers can be spotted at Southern California’s busiest airport, the golden poppies have been noticeably absent this year from some of the locations flora fanatics gather to see them, such as the Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve. That is partly due to the deluge from back-toback storms making it easier for invasive grasses and plants to flourish, which then out-compete native plants such as poppies.

But wildflower­s have sprung up elsewhere in Southern California.

Theodore Payne Foundation’s Wild Flower Hotline updates every Friday into June about where wildflower superbloom­s are taking place. The informatio­n can be accessed through phone message by calling (818) 768-1802 Ext. 7, by sub

scribing to the podcast or by reading the online blog.

Botanist Lorrae Fuentes, who has built a network of colleagues to report wildflower sightings in Central and Southern California, has collected the informatio­n.

According to the latest report for March 22, springtime wildflower­s are blooming at the Habitat Gardens at Elizabeth Learning Center in Cudahy. They include creosote bush, desert lavender, apricot mallow, desert bluebells, milkweed and more.

At Anza Borrego Desert State Park, brittlebus­h and other species of desert shrubs have bloomed, and the colorful Montezuma Grade is expected to appear when there’s more warm weather.

In the southern Sierra foothills, blue oaks and redbuds have been spotted in Visalia, while fiddleneck­s, shooting stars, streambank spring beauties and rusty popcorn flowers have bloomed in Eastwood.

At Los Padres National Forest along the Central California coast, swaths of California poppies, California buttercups, purple shooting stars and gold fields fill the slopes. They can be seen along Figueroa Mountain Road from Los Olivos.

In the San Gabriel Mountains, wildflower­s have started to bloom along the first leg of the Canyon Trail at the Placerita Canyon Nature Center in Newhall. Hikers can see California buckwheat, arroyo willow, black sage, big berry manzanita and hairy ceanothus.

 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? A BRITISH AIRWAYS JET lands at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport, where passengers got a window seat view of wildflower fields blooming between the runways. A similar bloom occurred there in the spring of 2019.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times A BRITISH AIRWAYS JET lands at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport, where passengers got a window seat view of wildflower fields blooming between the runways. A similar bloom occurred there in the spring of 2019.
 ?? BRIAN VAN DER BRUG Los Angeles Times ?? GRASS BENDS in the wind amid wildf lowers mimicking the sweeping roof line of Tom Bradley Internatio­nal Terminal at LAX. Surprising­ly, California golden poppies, the state f lower, have been noticeably absent.
BRIAN VAN DER BRUG Los Angeles Times GRASS BENDS in the wind amid wildf lowers mimicking the sweeping roof line of Tom Bradley Internatio­nal Terminal at LAX. Surprising­ly, California golden poppies, the state f lower, have been noticeably absent.

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